
It is difficult to see how the Europe question will not resurface once Labour has decided to politely thank Sir Keir Starmer for his work in making Labour re-electable after the lost Corbyn years but look for a new leader and prime minister who is a professional politician not a government legal manager who decided to go into politics as a retirement hobby.
In his latest batch of opinion polls Lord Ashcroft reports that 53 per cent supported rejoining the EU and 30 per cent remained opposed.
While nearly eight in ten Labour, LibDem and Green voters said they would vote to rejoin a surprising 25 per cent of Tory voters and even 11 per cent of Reform voters now back Rejoin.
In Norma Percy’s new BBC documentary on the Brexit 2016 campaign “A Very British Civil War” viewers see a jowly David Cameron and a paunchy Boris Johnson repeating their incantations from 2016. They look like two ageing men living in the past.
Today the economic facts speak for themselves. In 2025 goods exports from the UK were $485 bn, from Germany $1.77 trillion, from France $668 bn, from Italy $726 bn.
Britain’s declining number of mainly long retired economists who still defend the trade and people rupture with Europe point to the glorious profits made by the City selling its financial engineering products. Last year these brought in just £166 bn for the UK.
The City’s genius lies in on-line financial engineering, including the lucrative new crypto and bitcoin currency manipulations undertaken by clever Brits in remote corners of the world where there is little financial supervision. Many scams emanating from these places are based on fraudsters conning individuals, usually over the phone, to invest in money growth products which to begin with show quick big profits, leading to serious money transfers and then the disappearance of the fraudster. Nearly all are based on crypto.
This non-regulated crypto world appears as a profit in the post-Brexit UK accounts, but does nothing to help growth outside the City as the rest of Britain, cut off from its largest markets, becomes poorer and poorer.
In nearly every chapter in his new book, “Can We Get Rich Again” the former Chancellor and eternal minister ,Jeremy Hunt urges British policymakers to copy better practice in Europe.
He is right but can Kemi Badenoch leave behind the early unconditional support for Donald Trump and resist the calls from many her party to cuddle up closely with Nigel Farage?
Tory leaders who have changed the political weather have done so by finding a political vacuum and filling it. Robert Peel was accused by Benjamin Disraeli of “catching the Whigs bathing and walking off with their clothes” because Peel adopted liberal policies like voting reform, protection of young workers, trade reform to promote free trade all which challenged the cherished beliefs of established Toryism.
The same was true of Baldwin and the early Neville Chamberlain who promoted council housing, health care and other social legislation which enraged Tory diehards and press lords like Northcliffe. But they won power for Tories.
As did Macmillan’s endorsement of the 1945 social reforms brought in by Labour and Margaret Thatcher powering ahead with the Single European Act against the opposition of the anti-European Labour Party which fought the 1983 election on a manifesto offering a referendum on leaving the EEC with a pledge that Labour would campaign for a Leave vote.
To be sure the question of a British prime minister sitting in council with other European leaders every month to lay down 101 big and small decisions has been settled. Britain is now an observer not a decider , a rule-taker not a Thatcher-like rule-maker in Europe.
Until now Kemi Badenoch has shown little desire to challenge the conventional Tory thinking of Brexit era prime ministers. This has not paid off
Comments
6 responses to “Kemi Badenoch "can make an impact with innovative thinking" on the UK-Europe relationship”
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Kemi Badenoch’s innovative thinking on UK-Europe relations is about as refreshing as a soggy biscuit at a tea party—brilliant, if you enjoy crumbs. ☕️🧐
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Kemi’s “innovative thinking” might just be the breath of fresh air we need—right after a week of stale fish and chips. Who knew observing from the sidelines could be so impactful? 🤷♂️
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Kemi’s innovative thinking on UK-Europe relations is as refreshing as a pint of warm beer in a pub that forgot to turn on the heating. 🍺 Maybe she’ll surprise us all and actually listen to the professionals instead of just reading the back of a takeaway menu.
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Kemi Badenoch’s “innovative thinking” is like finding new ways to serve stale bread at a dinner party—everyone’s politely nodding, but we all know it’s just not cutting the mustard, innit? 🥴
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Blimey, if Kemi Badenoch’s innovative thinking is anything like the last few PMs, we might as well take up knitting instead of discussing UK-Europe relations. 😂 Let’s hope her impact is more than just a fresh coat of paint on a crumbling edifice!
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If Kemi Badenoch’s innovative thinking is anything like a typical British summer, we might just end up with a drizzle of good intentions and a flood of missed opportunities. 🤷♂️ Let’s just hope she doesn’t bring a brolly to a sunny picnic!
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Kemi Badenoch’s big idea for the UK-Europe relationship? It’s like bringing a butter knife to a sword fight—innovative thinking indeed! 🥴
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Kemi Badenoch "can make an impact with innovative thinking" on the UK-Europe relationship
It is difficult to see how the Europe question will not resurface once Labour has decided to politely thank Sir Keir Starmer for his work in making Labour re-electable after the lost Corbyn years but look for a new leader and prime minister who is a professional politician not a government legal manager who decided to go into politics as a retirement hobby.
In his latest batch of opinion polls
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Sarhan Basem is Eurotoday’s Senior Correspondent to the European Parliament. With a Bachelor’s degree in English Literature, Sarhan brings a unique blend of linguistic finesse and analytical prowess to his reporting. Specializing in foreign affairs, human rights, civil liberties, and security issues, he delves deep into the intricacies of global politics to provide insightful comment
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